Posts Tagged ‘website negotiations’

Selling websites and domain names pose unique challenges that are different from selling any other types of traditional assets. The biggest challenge for a seller is anonymity.
In order to sell a house, potential buyers have to visit the house and ...

So, you're looking to sell your website, the buyer has performed all necessary due diligence, you have finalized all negotiations, and now both parties are ready to sign a formal binding website purchase agreement.
Congratulations are in order as you are ...

Ideally, in business transactions, it is best to negotiate offers and counteroffers face-to-face or by phone. However, this is not always possible, especially in today's global environment where buyers and sellers are often not in the same city, and increasingly, ...

The more information available to an investor, the lower the perceived investment risk to the investor. This applies to investors in all asset classes such as investors in private businesses, publicly-traded stocks, bonds, and real estate.
How does this apply to ...

The process of selling a website can be very emotional. In fact, selling any asset for a large dollar number is emotional. Even veteran website sellers get offended when website buyers criticize their website or asking price. Many sellers ...

The process of selling your website can be an emotional roller coaster. It can be a long process with negotiations going back-and-forth for days between buyers and sellers. In these emotional exchanges of information, people are human and they can ...

Most website deals involving seller financing are in transactions over $100,000. This is a rule of thumb. But as I noted in the article When To Structure an All-Cash Website Deal, this rule is not carved in stone. It

A common mistake made by domain name and website sellers is they list their domains and websites for sale as "Make Offer" with no price, sit back, and wait for the market to price their assets for them. They list and hope that buyers ...

An unavoidable element in selling websites is the curious website buyer. This is the buyer who has no intention of buying a website but requests confidential information and asks tons of questions while hiding behind the anonymity provided by his computer.
The Internet offers anonymity ...

Many website sellers over-value and over-price their websites. It's completely understandable as they invested a lot of time and money in their websites and want to cash out at the biggest price possible. But their expectations often do not match ...